Huh? All these stores you listed has contactless payments and has Apple Pay. The store can’t turn off only Apple Pay, the news articles you see here means they enabled contactless payments which are still new-ish in the US. At these stores that don’t have “Apple Pay” you still had to insert the chip. For example before they turned on everything, trying to tap at CVS would give you a message that said “Card must be inserted”...now you can tap anything at CVS, it’ll work, be it a card, an iPhone, an android, doesn’t matter.Still hard to understand why Apple Pay is merchant-specific in the US (i.e. the merchant can refuse to take Apple Pay)
In other parts of the world, Apple deals with the bank and then the Apple Pay card is equivalent to the physical card and can be used with any merchant that has an NFC-capable terminal.
It’s quite difficult to remember that Costco accepts Apple Pay, Target changes their mind every week. What about CVS, 7/11 etc.
Huh? All these stores you listed has contactless payments and has Apple Pay. The store can’t turn off only Apple Pay, the news articles you see here means they enabled contactless payments which are still new-ish in the US. At these stores that don’t have “Apple Pay” you still had to insert the chip. For example before they turned on everything, trying to tap at CVS would give you a message that said “Card must be inserted”...now you can tap anything at CVS, it’ll work, be it a card, an iPhone, an android, doesn’t matter.
The point is moot now, most retailers but Walmart now have contactless payments which means Apple Pay.
It works exactly the same as those European terminals. It’s all done by the bank just like in Europe. And now it seems every day another bank is issuing the same contactless cards that Europe had for years, which should also help better Apple Pay acceptance.
But most US cards before this year only had the gold chip that you had to insert, not the ones you can tap. So before these, the only form of contactless in the US were done through phones. (But you could be from Europe and tap a European card here fine).
Tl;dr: the US is finally catching up to the rest of the world and Apple Pay is just contactless payment in the US, as it is in Europe.
The stores may not be able to turn off apple pay itself, but they certainly can turn off contactless payment altogether at will (i.e., they can deliberately turn off the NFC contactless readers on all their terminals and only take payments using the chip and magnetic stripe readers). And several of them have certainly done that in the US at some point in the last five years because they were part of a group that didn’t want to accept apple pay and instead intended to support a QR code based mobile wallet called currentC that ended up being a flop. Some of the stores that were part of that group have now relented and turned contactless back on such as CVS, Target, Rite Aid, Best Buy or 7-eleven, while others continue to hold out of accepting any contactless payment such as Walmart, Home Depot, Publix, HEB or Kroger.Huh? All these stores you listed has contactless payments and has Apple Pay. The store can’t turn off only Apple Pay, the news articles you see here means they enabled contactless payments which are still new-ish in the US. At these stores that don’t have “Apple Pay” you still had to insert the chip. For example before they turned on everything, trying to tap at CVS would give you a message that said “Card must be inserted”...now you can tap anything at CVS, it’ll work, be it a card, an iPhone, an android, doesn’t matter.
The point is moot now, most retailers but Walmart now have contactless payments which means Apple Pay.
It works exactly the same as those European terminals. It’s all done by the bank just like in Europe. And now it seems every day another bank is issuing the same contactless cards that Europe had for years, which should also help better Apple Pay acceptance.
But most US cards before this year only had the gold chip that you had to insert, not the ones you can tap. So before these, the only form of contactless in the US were done through phones. (But you could be from Europe and tap a European card here fine).
Tl;dr: the US is finally catching up to the rest of the world and Apple Pay is just contactless payment in the US, as it is in Europe.
Apple Pay is not merchant specific. It’s just that many merchants in the US are just starting to accept contactless payments, while others such as the ones you mention in your post (except for Costco) disabled contactless payments altogether purposely for years because they intended to support a QR code based mobile wallet called CurrentC. When CurrentC turned out to be a flop, many of its former supporters such as CVS, Target, 7-eleven, Rite Aid or Best Buy relented and turned their contactless readers back on, but others such as Walmart, Publix or Kroger continue to hold out and keep contactless disabled in favor of their own QR code based mobile payment apps.Still hard to understand why Apple Pay is merchant-specific in the US (i.e. the merchant can refuse to take Apple Pay)
In other parts of the world, Apple deals with the bank and then the Apple Pay card is equivalent to the physical card and can be used with any merchant that has an NFC-capable terminal.
It’s quite difficult to remember that Costco accepts Apple Pay, Target changes their mind every week. What about CVS, 7/11 etc.
Target and CVS do now. Don't know about 7-11. WM is still a bunch of punks with their proprietary nonsense.Still hard to understand why Apple Pay is merchant-specific in the US (i.e. the merchant can refuse to take Apple Pay)
In other parts of the world, Apple deals with the bank and then the Apple Pay card is equivalent to the physical card and can be used with any merchant that has an NFC-capable terminal.
It’s quite difficult to remember that Costco accepts Apple Pay, Target changes their mind every week. What about CVS, 7/11 etc.
Glad to see Apple finally catching up mobile wallet/membership card features.
Just curious JPack, what is the two big Apple Pay news you are referring to?
I searched on Google for Apple Pay and limited it to the past 2 weeks but found nothing outside of Apple Card speculation articles.
Huh? All these stores you listed has contactless payments and has Apple Pay. The store can’t turn off only Apple Pay, the news articles you see here means they enabled contactless payments which are still new-ish in the US. At these stores that don’t have “Apple Pay” you still had to insert the chip. For example before they turned on everything, trying to tap at CVS would give you a message that said “Card must be inserted”...now you can tap anything at CVS, it’ll work, be it a card, an iPhone, an android, doesn’t matter.
The point is moot now, most retailers but Walmart now have contactless payments which means Apple Pay.
It works exactly the same as those European terminals. It’s all done by the bank just like in Europe. And now it seems every day another bank is issuing the same contactless cards that Europe had for years, which should also help better Apple Pay acceptance.
But most US cards before this year only had the gold chip that you had to insert, not the ones you can tap. So before these, the only form of contactless in the US were done through phones. (But you could be from Europe and tap a European card here fine).
Tl;dr: the US is finally catching up to the rest of the world and Apple Pay is just contactless payment in the US, as it is in Europe.
Thanks for the clarification. My view came from MacRumors always reporting on "store Y now accepting Apple Pay", and "chain X no longer accepting Apple Pay" instead of "contactless"
I definitely regularly encounter stores (in the US) that have nfc readers that do not accept Apple Pay, officially and/or in reality. For some of them, that was merely the official word but I did not test it for myself. For others, Apple Pay was officially accepted but would not work reliably or at all. I’ve tested and sometimes it worked, sometimes it didn’t. Notably, in these cases, the workers all seemed to say Samsung pay worked reliably. I don’t know what makes Samsung pay different, but that’s what many of them said.The stores may not be able to turn off apple pay itself, but they certainly can turn off contactless payment altogether at will (i.e., they can deliberately turn off the NFC contactless readers on all their terminals and only take payments using the chip and magnetic stripe readers). And several of them have certainly done that in the US at some point in the last five years because they were part of a group that didn’t want to accept apple pay and instead intended to support a QR code based mobile wallet called currentC that ended up being a flop. Some of the stores that were part of that group have now relented and turned contactless back on such as CVS, Target, Rite Aid, Best Buy or 7-eleven, while others continue to hold out of accepting any contactless payment such as Walmart, Home Depot, Publix, HEB or Kroger.
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Apple Pay is not merchant specific. It’s just that many merchants in the US are just starting to accept contactless payments, while others such as the ones you mention in your post (except for Costco) disabled contactless payments altogether purposely for years because they intended to support a QR code based mobile wallet called CurrentC. When CurrentC turned out to be a flop, many of its former supporters such as CVS, Target, 7-eleven, Rite Aid or Best Buy relented and turned their contactless readers back on, but others such as Walmart, Publix or Kroger continue to hold out and keep contactless disabled in favor of their own QR code based mobile payment apps.
I think this confusion that makes people think apple pay is merchant specific in the US is actually Apple’s fault, because at Apple they are completely incapable of using the term “contactless payment” and instead only speak about places that accept apple pay and places that don’t as if other forms of NFC contactless payment didn’t exist.
I definitely regularly encounter stores (in the US) that have nfc readers that do not accept Apple Pay, officially and/or in reality. For some of them, that was merely the official word but I did not test it for myself. For others, Apple Pay was officially accepted but would not work reliably or at all. I’ve tested and sometimes it worked, sometimes it didn’t. Notably, in these cases, the workers all seemed to say Samsung pay worked reliably. I don’t know what makes Samsung pay different, but that’s what many of them said.
This has just been my experience. It’s rather frustrating.
There are only two reasons why an NFC reader wouldn't accept Apple Pay: either the reader doesn't work (in which case the terminal won't accept anything that's NFC contactless all the way down to the contactless cards), or you're trying to use a payment network not accepted by the merchant (such as in Costco stores, where only Visa cards are accepted so Apple Pay also only works if a Visa card was selected before trying to make the payment). Other than those two scenarios, Apple Pay should work anywhere contactless payment is working, even if the purchase is being made at a merchant located in a country that does not yet support Apple Pay. Note that, in the US, the 'NFC reader not working' category also includes a few holdout retailers such as Walmart, Home Depot, Publix or Kroger that did turn off their NFC readers on purpose and thus are unable to accept not only Apple Pay, but also any other form of NFC contactless payment all the way down to the cards.I definitely regularly encounter stores (in the US) that have nfc readers that do not accept Apple Pay, officially and/or in reality. For some of them, that was merely the official word but I did not test it for myself. For others, Apple Pay was officially accepted but would not work reliably or at all. I’ve tested and sometimes it worked, sometimes it didn’t. Notably, in these cases, the workers all seemed to say Samsung pay worked reliably. I don’t know what makes Samsung pay different, but that’s what many of them said.
This has just been my experience. It’s rather frustrating.
In the terminals used at that grocery chain, they encourage customers to insert the card in the chip reader prior to completing the check-out. Apparently, their system can run a card authorization prior to the transaction being totaled. Considering the time it takes for some chip transactions to be processed... "Wait... wait... You can now remove card," I can see how pre-authorization could speed the check-out line. I'm only guessing here, but maybe contactless doesn't support that kind of pre-authorization (for good reason, as in my understanding, with contactless the customer is actually confirming the charge is appropriate).
It’s quite difficult to remember that Costco accepts Apple Pay, Target changes their mind every week. What about CVS, 7/11 etc.
Delete and re add your card. Sounds like the card you have in Apple Pay is still using legacy MSD contactless not the new EMV one.Apple Pay no longer works for me at Meijer for groceries but it does work at the Meijer gas station. I can't use it at Target anymore, its stopped working at Chick-fil-a, it doesn't work at my local coffee shop anymore. Not sure what the deal is.
Delete and re add your card. Sounds like the card you have in Apple Pay is still using legacy MSD contactless not the new EMV one.
What kind of card is it? Your bank may not offer EMV contactless yet (such as Credit One) which causes these kinds of issues. Try it with another card, you’ll be pleasantly surprised. Most cards from major banks like Wells Fargo, the new Apple Card etc all offer EMV contactless. Discover and American Express cards don’t always work all too well with Apple Pay, IMO.Thanks for the reply. Yes I did remove it but when I went to add it back it was already populated. I hit accept and Im still getting the same pay errors. In my wallet app it literally says declined at Chick Fil A, Target, Meijer groceries but again I can make purchases at the Meijer gas pump and Nike Store online. Of course the physical card works fine at those stores as well. On one visit to Target I tried Apple Pay twice and my bank locked me out and sent me an email and text for fraud alert. Once I confirmed it was me I was able to use the physical card but again ApplePay still doesn't work. Whats funny is I use to be able to use it all the time just fine. Suddenly I'm having issues.
What kind of card is it? Your bank may not offer EMV contactless yet (such as Credit One) which causes these kinds of issues. Try it with another card, you’ll be pleasantly surprised. Most cards from major banks like Wells Fargo, the new Apple Card etc all offer EMV contactless. Discover and American Express cards don’t always work all too well with Apple Pay, IMO.
Just recently most terminals received an update to enable EMV contactless at various times. It was the reason why JC Penney lost Apple Pay for a month and it came back.Just the standard Visa Debit card with a chip from my bank. I dont understand why it was working fine at one point then suddenly stopped working at most terminals.
The point is moot now, most retailers but Walmart now have contactless payments which means Apple Pay.
That was because everywhere else it was a requirement to abandon magnetic stripe readers for security reasons, so everyone replaced their magnetic stripe readers by chip readers and those devices had contactless built in as well, but in the US merchants were allowed to continue using their decades old magnetic stripe readers at least until 2014 when Apple Pay came out. Even in Mexico and other parts of Latin America magnetic stripes were abandoned nearly a decade ago in favor of chip readers for security. Contactless didn’t take off in Mexico when it did in canada and other places, but it’s starting to take off now and the transition is much easier and cheaper than in the US because most chip readers currently in use in the country also have a built in NFC reader. Thus, all that needs to be done is turn on the NFC reader via software on the terminals that still have it turned off (and maybe update the software running on the cash registers), as opposed to the US where merchants actually had to replace all their equipment.I always found it weird that “tap” pay seems to have taken off in Canada a lot faster than in the States. By the time Apple Pay was introduced in Canada, it seemed that virtually every retailer/restaurant already supported “tap”. For the first year or two it was very common for cashiers to be surprised and confused for a moment when I paid by just holding my phone over the terminal. Usually I was the one who had to tell them about Apple Pay!
As pervasive as the technology is here, Apple Pay specifically never got a lot of promotion or attention. I use it all the time, but I know a lot of iPhone users who don’t even really know it’s a thing.